Christopher Mathias wrote on Huffington Post about the latest warning of rising extremism. Another hate group has appeared to blight our nation, according to the Southern Poverty law Center. There are so many of them. Just a week or so ago, Nazis marched through the streets of Nashville. They call themselves the “Parriotic Front.” Their faces were covered, of course. Apparently they don’t object to face masks when they are acting as Nazis. It’s hard to distinguish them from the Ku Klux Klan, except the Klan wore masks and dressed in white hoods.
Mathias writes:
A growing Christian supremacist movement that labels its perceived enemies as “demonic” and enjoys close ties to major Republican figures is “the greatest threat to American democracy you’ve never heard of,” according to a new report from the Southern Poverty Law Center.
The SPLC, a civil rights organization that monitors extremist groups, released its “Year In Hate And Extremism 2023” report on Tuesday. A significant portion of the report, which tracked burgeoning anti-democratic and neo-fascist movements and actors across America, is devoted to the New Apostolic Reformation, “a new and powerful Christian supremacy movement that is attempting to transform culture and politics in the U.S. and countries across the world into a grim authoritarianism.”
Emerging out of the charismatic evangelical tradition, the NAR adheres to a form of Christian dominionism, meaning its parishioners believe it’s their divine duty to seize control of every political and cultural institution in America, transforming them according to a fundamentalist interpretation of scripture.
NAR adherents also believe in the existence of modern-day “apostles” and “prophets” — church leaders endowed by God with supernatural abilities, including the power to heal. In 2022, a handful of these “apostles,” the report notes, issued what they called the Watchman Decree, an anti-democratic document envisioning the end of a pluralistic society in America.
The apostles claimed they had been given “legal power and authority from Heaven” and are “God’s ambassadors and spokespeople over the earth,” who “are equipped and delegated by Him to destroy every attempted advance of the enemy.”
And who’s the enemy? Basically anyone who does not adhere to NAR beliefs. NAR adherents see their critics as being literally controlled by the devil.
“There are claims that whole neighborhoods, cities, even nations are under the sway of the demonic,” the report states. “Other religions, such as Islam, are also said to be demonically influenced. One cannot compromise with evil, and so if Democrats, liberals, LGBTQ+ people, and others are seen as demonic, political compromise — the heart of democratic life — becomes difficult if not impossible.”
This rhetoric has become increasingly widespread among Republican lawmakers, including former President Donald Trump, who last year referred to Marxists and atheists as “evil demonic forces that want to destroy our country.”
That Trump would use NAR-inspired rhetoric is unsurprising considering his relationship with Paula White-Cain, an NAR figure who delivered the invocation at Trump’s inauguration in 2017 and at the kickoff of his 2020 reelection campaign, as noted by Paul Rosenberg in Salon. White-Cain also delivered the invocation at Trump’s Jan. 6, 2021, “Stop the Steal” rally in Washington, D.C. — the event that eventually became the insurrection at the Capitol.
The attack on the Capitol was largely inspired, the report suggests, by NAR’s theology of dominionism. “NAR prayer groups were mobilized at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, as well as supporting prayer teams all over the country, to exorcise the demonic influence over the Capitol that adherents said was keeping Trump from his rightful, prophesized second term,” the report states.
Major Republican figures took part in such events on or around the day of the attack. Mike Johnson, who is now the speaker of the House, joined the NAR’s “Global Prayer for Election Integrity,” which called for Trump’s reinstatement as president, in the weeks leading up to the attack on the Capitol. Johnson has also stated that Jim Garlow, an NAR leader, has had a “profound influence” on his life.

Ultimately, the SPLC report is an attempt to ring the alarm bells about the NAR, ”the greatest threat to U.S. democracy that you have never heard of.
“It is already a powerful, wealthy and influential movement and composes a highly influential block of one of the two main political parties in the country,” the report continues. “So few people have heard of NAR that it is possible that, without resistance in our local communities, dominionism might win without ever having been truly opposed.”
The SPLC’s report, according to a press release, also documents 595 hate groups and 835 antigovernment extremist groups in America, “including a growing wave of white nationalism increasingly motivated by theocratic beliefs and conspiracy theories.”
“With a historic election just months away, this year, more than any other, we must act to preserve our democracy,” Margaret Huang, president and CEO of the Southern Poverty Law Center and SPLC Action Fund, said in a statement. “That will require us to directly address the danger of hate and extremism from our schools to our statehouses. Our report exposes these far-right extremists and serves as a tool for advocates and communities working to counter disinformation, false conspiracies and threats to voters and election workers.”

Growing up in the South, I often witnessed a Christian Nationalist mindset that gave far more power to “Satan” than to the God they claimed to worship. Their scriptural references are more often verses espousing a vengeful God over forgiveness. This is a cult philosophy based on fear not faith, hope, or love. In junior high school I was standing in the cafeteria line while an evangelical friend of mine were talking about a jewish classmate. I said she was a great person. He said yeah, “but it’s too bad she is going to hell.” This dominionism has been a dark side of Southern Culture since before the Civil War and now it has spread throughout rural America. The apocalyptic prophecies they so cling to from the Book of Daniel to Revelations have never been realized, yet this is the basis that fuels their hatred of others. We are now facing a time where Sauron has called his orcs to battle. Yes, our archetypal mythology does drive our human frailties. When retribution becomes a driving force in both legend and history, too many of us fall in line to hasten the onslaught.
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This is a good summary of some religious beliefs. So many Protestants are actually not monotheistic at all. They actually believe in a multitude of gods, some led by the good god they like and others are a ubiquitous mess of devils led by Satan. They live a life defined by a dichotomy: the good god is fighting an evil god. The things I think are good have the stamp of my god, the other stuff is Satan. I am the arbiter of good and evil.
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A much more concise summary of what we are up against. Thank you.
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And then there are the various grimoires produced by the 2025 Project.
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Like I wrote…Sauron and his Orcs…or Senator Palpatine…name your archetype.
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Spot on, P.
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Great stuff, Paul and Roy!
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Masks should be banned in marches, demonstrations, protests, etc.
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The same people protesting masks for Covid now wear masks to hide their face in KKK marches. Ironic!
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The only one I feel any sympathy for here is the poor sap that invented tiki torches – probably the same dude who invented jell-o.
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The guy who invented cubicles died a year or two ago. He was horrified about what had become of his invention, which he created to give people the flexibility to reconfigure offices for contact between team members for new projects, not for the creation of spam farms.
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My god is red hot
Your god ain’t doodly-squat!
Gene Lyons
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Now, now, jsr. “All gods matter.”
–A teaching of Enlightened Master Bob Shepherd, Intergalactic Omnitheists Ltd., reported for your instruction and advancement by Spiritual Wife Sister Akashic Annuaki Peablossom
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I saw that on the news here in Nashville. The video showed them all marching out of the backs of a couple of U-Haul Trucks. Even our Trump-supporting governor spoke out against this masked group. If I’m not mistaken, I think the news also reported they did some spray painted graffiti under a bridge. It was also mentioned that they didn’t have a permit or something like that. The whole thing seemed bizarre to say the least.
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JESUS FAILED — Christian nationalists see Jesus as a failure.
Jesus preached His Way of living throughout the New Testament, as in The Sermon of the Mount [Matt 5:3-12] where He declared that “Blessed are the meek [meaning, the gentle; the considerate; the humble]” — but Christian nationalists view such teachings of Jesus as not having worked to make the world into the world they want; so, Christian nationalists have a “better” way: Instead of the humility that Jesus taught and lived, the Christian nationalists have decided on pride, as in The Proud Boys.
Jesus told Peter to put away his sword and that “those who take the sword shall die by the sword” (Matt 26:52). But Christian nationalists view Christ’s teaching of putting away the weapons as having failed, so they have turned to arming themselves with more and more guns.
What today’s Christian nationalists fail to understand is that if God had wanted Jesus to conquer evil with force, He would have sent Jesus to Earth, descending from the heavens on a golden throne amid clouds with flashing bolts of lightning and surrounded and backed up by a heaven-filling army of terrifying and unkillable angels.
Instead, God sent Jesus to Earth to be born in a stinking stable to poor, totally obscure parents of total unimportance in a world dominated by the mighty Roman Empire.
Christ’s Gospel of meekness, repentance, forgiveness, love, and service to others has failed: God got it wrong.
Today’s Christian nationalists think that it is now up to THEM to make the world right — no more meekness, no more putting away the sword.
Instead, Christian nationalists arm themselves with pride and guns and political power to intimidate and to force others to live the “right” way.
Christian nationalists have sidelined the teaching of Christ and have turned instead to follow a person of pride, boasting, deceit, and trickery to show God and Jesus how saving the world should have been done.
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